SYNASC 2025: 27th International Symposium on Symbolic and Numeric Algorithms for Scientific Computing West University of Timisoara Timisoara, Romania, September 22-25, 2025 |
Conference website | https://synasc.ro/2025 |
Submission link | https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=synasc2025 |
Submission deadline | May 15, 2025 |
SYNASC aims to stimulate the interaction among multiple communities focusing on defining, optimizing, and executing complex algorithms in several application areas. The focus of the conference then ranges from symbolic and numeric computation to formal methods applied to programming, artificial intelligence, distributed computing, and computing theory. The interplay between these areas is essential in the current scenario where the economy and society demand for the development of complex, data-intensive, trustable, and high-performance computational systems.
AVM 2025 (17th Alpine Verification Meeting) is collocated with SYNASC 2025.
Important Dates
- 15 May 2025 (AoE): Paper submission for main tracks
- 15 June 2025 (AoE): Paper submission for workshops and special sessions
- 25 July 2025: Notification of acceptance
- 12 September 2025: Registration
- 12 September 2025: Revised papers according to the reviews
- 22-25 September 2025: Symposium
Submission Guidelines
All submissions must contain original research results and should not be submitted or published elsewhere. There are three categories of submissions:
- Regular papers describing fully completed research results (up to 8 pages of text, excluding references, in the two-column paper style).
- System descriptions and experimental papers describing software prototypes, results of simulations, or experimental data analysis, with a link to the reported results (up to 8 pages of text, excluding references, in the two-column paper style).
- Short papers, describing ongoing work, preliminary results and/or research challenges of PhD students (up to 4 pages of text, excluding references, in the two-columns paper style).
Invited speakers
- Josiane Zerubia, INRIA France
< to be extended >
Call for Special Sessions
Proposals are invited for special sessions on any topic relevant to the conference. Special sessions are intended to stimulate in-depth discussions in special areas and they are fully integrated into the main conference. The research papers and the informal presentations submitted and accepted for the special sessions follow the same rules as the papers submitted to the regular sessions. It is expected that the organizers of the special sessions appoint their own chair and program committee, which will be integrated into the conference program committee and will be supervised by the conference program chair and by the general chair.
The special session proposals should be sent to contact@synasc.ro and should specify the following:
- Special session title.
- A brief description of the topics to be covered, and a motivation of the relevance of the special session to SYNASC audience.
- A list of organizers with email addresses and a one-paragraph bio for each organizer, describing research expertise, and previous experience in organizing scientific meetings.
- A preliminary list of the program committee.
Call for Workshops
Proposals for satellite workshops are invited. The workshops should have topics related to SYNASC but the workshop organizers manage the scientific program of each satellite workshop. The workshop proposals should be sent to contact@synasc.ro and should specify the following:
- Workshop title.
- A brief description of the topics to be covered, and a motivation of the relevance of the workshop to SYNASC audience.
- A description of the history of the workshop (if it previously took place).
- A list of organizers with email addresses and a one-paragraph bio for each organizer, describing research expertise, and previous experience in organizing scientific meetings.
- A preliminary list of the program committee.
Call for Tutorials
Proposals for tutorials are also invited. Tutorials provide fundamental exposure to topics ranging from introductory through intermediate to advanced. The number and the duration of the tutorials will be decided by the tutorial chair under the supervision of the general chair. The typical duration of a tutorial session is 90 minutes. If it is necessary a tutorial can be split into two sessions, each one of 90 minutes. The tutorial proposals should be sent to contact@synasc.ro and should contain
- The tutorial title
- A short abstract and information its organization (one or two sessions)
- The name(s) of the speaker(s) together with a one-paragraph bio for each one
List of Topics
SYNASC is organized into six tracks:
- Symbolic Computation
- computer algebra
- symbolic analysis
- symbolic combinatorics
- symbolic techniques applied to numerics
- symbolic regression
- hybrid symbolic and numeric algorithms
- numerics and symbolics for geometry
- programming with constraints, narrowing
- applications of symbolic computation to artificial intelligence and vice-versa
- Numerical Computing
- iterative approximation of fixed points
- solving systems of nonlinear equations
- numerical and symbolic algorithms for differential equations
- numerical and symbolic algorithms for optimization
- parallel algorithms for numerical computing
- scientific visualization and image processing
- Logic and Programming
- automatic reasoning
- formal system verification
- formal verification and synthesis
- software quality assessment
- static analysis
- timing analysis
- automated testing
- Distributed Computing
- modelling of parallel and distributed systems
- parallel and distributed algorithms
- architectures for parallel and distributed systems
- applications for parallel and distributed systems
- acceleration of AI or Big Data applications using distributed and parallel computing
- networked intelligence and Internet of Things
- Artificial Intelligence
- knowledge discovery, representation, and management
- automated reasoning, uncertain reasoning, and constraint strategies
- recommender and expert systems
- intelligent systems, agents, and networks
- agent-based complex systems
- AI-based systems for scientific computing
- machine learning – including deep learning models and technologies
- explainable and trustworthy AI
- information retrieval, data mining, text mining and web mining
- computational intelligence - including fuzzy, neural and evolutionary computing
- AI applications: natural language processing, computer vision, signal processing, stock market, computational neuroscience, robotics, autonomous vehicles, medical diagnosis, cybersecurity, digital design, online education, algorithm invention and analysis
- Theory of Computing
- data structures and algorithms
- combinatorial optimization
- formal languages and combinatorics on words
- graph-theoretic and combinatorial methods in computer science
- algorithmic paradigms, including distributed, online, approximation, probabilistic, game-theoretic algorithms
- computational complexity theory, including structural complexity, boolean complexity, communication complexity, average-case complexity, derandomization and property testing
- logical approaches to complexity, including finite model theory
- algorithmic and computational learning theory
- aspects of computability theory, including computability in analysis and algorithmic information theory
- proof complexity
- computational social choice and game theory
- new computational paradigms: CNN computing, quantum, holographic and other non-standard approaches to computability
- randomized methods, random graphs, threshold phenomena and typical-case complexity
- automata theory and other formal models, particularly in relation to formal verification methods such as model checking and runtime verification
- applications of theory, including wireless and sensor networks, computational biology and computational economics
- experimental algorithmics
Committees
Program Committee
- Honorary Chair:
- Bruno Buchberger, Johannes Kepler University, Austria
- Steering Committee:
- Anca Mirela Andreica, Babes-Bolyai University of Cluj-Napoca, Romania
- James Davenport, University of Bath, UK
- Tetsuo Ida, University of Tsukuba, Japan
- Tudor Jebelean, Johannes Kepler University, Austria
- Laura Kovacs, Technical University of Vienna, Austria
- Dorel Lucanu, "Alexandru Ioan Cuza" University of Iasi, Romania
- Viorel Negru, West University of Timisoara, Romania
- Dana Petcu, West University of Timisoara, Romania
- Alin Stefanescu, University of Bucharest, Romania
- Stephen Watt, University of Western Ontario, Canada
- Daniela Zaharie, West University of Timisoara, Romania
- General Chairs:
- Viorel Negru, West University of Timisoara, Romania
- Daniela Zaharie, West University of Timisoara, Romania
- Program Chairs:
- Arie Gurfinkel, University of Waterloo, Canada
- Mircea Marin, West University of Timisoara, Romania
- Track Chairs:
- Symbolic Computation
- James Davenport, University of Bath, UK
- Stephen Watt, University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
- Numerical Computing
- Eva Kaslik, West University of Timisoara, Romania
- Dorota Mozyrska, Bialystok University of Technology, Poland
- Stephen Takacs, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria
- Logic and Programming
- Nikolaj Bjorner, Microsoft Research, USA
- Arie Gurfinkel, University of Waterloo, Canada
- Laura Kovacs, Technical University of Vienna, Austria
- Artificial Intelligence
- Andrei Petrovski, Robert Gordon University, UK
- Daniela Zaharie, West University of Timisoara, Romania
- Distributed Computing
- Marc Frincu, Nottingham Trent University, UK
- Dana Petcu, West University of Timisoara, Romania
- Theory of Computing
- Gabriel Istrate, Institute e-Austria Timisoara, Romania
- Mircea Marin, West University of Timisoara, Romania
- Symbolic Computation
- Special Sessions and Workshops Chair:
- Daniel Pop, West University of Timisoara, Romania
- Tutorials Chair:
- Florin Fortis, West University of Timisoara, Romania
- Proceedings Chairs:
- Arie Gurfinkel, University of Waterloo, Canada
- Mircea Marin, West University of Timisoara, Romania
Organizing Committee
- Monica Sancira, West University of Timisoara, Romania - chair
- Cosmin Bonchis, West University of Timisoara, Romania
- Alexandra Fortis, West University of Timisoara, Romania
- Theodor Grumeza, West University of Timisoara, Romania
- Flavia Micota, West University of Timisoara, Romania
- Adrian Spătaru, West University of Timisoara, Romania
Publicity Chairs
- Silviu Panica, Institute e-Austria Timisoara, Romania
- Sebastian Stefănigă, West University of Timisoara, Romania
Technical Committee
- Dorin Cazan, West University of Timisoara, Romania
- Razvan Iovescu, West University of Timisoara, Romania
- Ștefan Secrieru, West University of Timisoara, Romania
Publication
SYNASC 2025 post-proceedings will be published by the Conference Publishing Service (CPS) and sent for indexing in Web of Science, Scopus, DBLP.
Venue
The conference will be held at the West University of Timisoara, Romania, blvd. Vasile Pârvan, 4.
Information related to accommodation can be found at https://synasc.ro/2025/accommodation/
Contact
All questions about submissions should be emailed to contact@synasc.ro